First place winner in Educational Products at the 2021 International Cartographic Conference
Maps are ubiquitous, yet maps are not made equally, nor are they read equally.
Every map is a product of its maker and its reader, and maps are rarely right or wrong but simply different versions of the truth. The meaning you see in a map can reinforce or challenge your understanding of the theme it represents, and you are much more likely to believe a map if it presents a version of the truth that you believe in already.
But how do you decide what map you want to make? How do you understand the way in which different maps can be used in different ways to tell a story? How do you design a map to be read in a particular way? Thematic Mapping: 101 Inspiring Ways to Visualise Empirical Data answers these questions, and more.
Using 101 maps, graphs, charts, and plots of the 2016 United States presidential election data, Thematic